The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, October 26, 2007 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS LANSING With deal nearing, state agencies brace for fallout As Michigan lawmakers work toward an agreement on a new spending plan, some state depart- ments already are planning tempo- rary layoffs and other cutbacks to make ends meet. About $430 million in cuts and spending limitations are needed to balance the new spending plan set to take effect Nov. 1. The state attorney general's office, for example, has planned three temporary, unpaid layoff days around Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year's Day to help deal with what it expects could be a $2 million reduction. Employees said they'd rather have everyone take layoff days than have to cut more staff, as happened earlier this year. Lawmakers have until next Wednesday to agree on a new spending plan, or risk a repeat of the partial government shutdown that struck in the early hours of Oct. 1. The state is operating under a 30- day extension of the past spending plan. LOS ANGELES Red tape grounded aircraft as Calif. fires began As wildfires were charging across Southern California, nearly two dozen water-dropping helicop- ters and two massive cargo planes sat idly by, grounded by govern- ment rules and bureaucracy. How much the aircraft would have helped will never be known, but their inability to provide quick assistance raises troubling ques- tions about California's prepara- tions for a fire season that was widely expected to be among the worst on record. It took as long as a day for Navy, Marine and California National Guard helicopters to get clearance early this week, in part because state rules require all firefight- ing choppers to be accompanied by state forestry "fire spotters" who coordinate water or retardant drops. By the time those spotters arrived, the powerful Santa Ana winds stoking the fires had made it too dangerous to fly. WASHINGTON Dems attack Rice's management of Iraq diplomacy House Democrats yesterday accused Secretary of State Condo- leezza Rice of grossly mismanaging diplomatic efforts in Iraq and con- cealing information from Congress, putting a visibly frustrated Rice on the defensive. At a hearing by a congressional watchdog committee, Democratic lawmakers said the State Depart- ment under Rice had been too lax with armed security contractors, ignored corruption at the highest levels of the Iraqi government and was sloppy in overseeing construc- tion of the costly new U.S. Embassy in Baghdad. WASHINGTON House passes SCHIP, but margin not veto-proof The House passed a revised chil- dren's health proposal yesterday, but not by the two-thirds margin that supporters will need if Presi- dent Bush vetoes the measure as promised. The 265-142 vote was a victory for Bush and his allies, who urged House Republicans to reject Demo- crats' claims that changes to the legislation had met their chief con- cerns. If the same vote occurs on a veto override attempt, Bush will prevail, as he did earlier this month when he vetoed a similar bill. The tally was seven votes short of a two-thirds majority. Several House members were absent. - Compiled from Daily wire reports U . vS. CAS : S RATIS 3,838 Number of American service mem- bers who have died in the war in Iraq, according to The Associated Press. The Department of Defense identified no new casualties yester- day. NEWS TIP? E-mail news@michigandaily.com or call the newsroom at 734-763-2459. KELLYN JACKSON/Dail Beth Karmeisool, the proprietor of the Safe Sex Store on South University Astene, holds a sex toy that was made with phthalates, a potentially toxic sabstance. So-me sexl. toys -might be toi SEX TOYS From page A ing from cosmetics to plastic shower curtains. And while the average per- son unavoidably comes into contact with phthalates in the air or through casual contact, people who use these jelly-like sex toys bring the substances in direct contact with their genital mucous membranes, a fast route into the bloodstream. It's not clear, though, how dangerous phthalates are in small amounts, because of a lack of research. Beth Karmeisool, owner of the Safe Sex Store on South Uni- versity Avenue, said many adult toy manufacturers were coming out publicly saying they would not produce products containing phthalates. She said she was only aware of one product in her store contain- ingphthalates,the Cyber-Flicker, made with a soft flesh-mimicking substance dubbed Cyber Skin. This product is designed for external use only. But the store's website indi- cated that 17 of the 40 vibrators it sells were made from phthal- ate-leaching PVC. One of those was a bright blue jelly-like vibrator that seemed to be "sweating" inside its plastic case. A quick click on the Safe Sex Store's website, which contains product information for all of the items sold there including mate- rial, confirmed the vibrator was made of PVC. Karmeisool was shocked to realize this, and the day after she learned of the presence of PVC, half of the blue vibrators were removed from the shelves. "That is something we will have to address with the compa- nies," she said. University Health Service's Gynecology Chief Susan Ernst said that because of the lack of research about the effects of phthalates on humans, it's unclear how harmful they really are. She stood apart from most of her counterparts when she was the only one out of 20 university medical professionals throughout the country willing to comment for a National Public Radio story that aired yesterday about the use of this potentially toxic material. Although she said she was hesitant at first because she wasn't very familiar with the issue, she commented about the lack of information available. On air, she said sex toy safety wasn't something present in the medical literature, or even something that came up with patients. Phthalates have been used in the past to soften the plastic in pacifiers, bottles and other things teething children might put into their mouths. But tests on lab animals showed exposure to phthalates can damage the liver and kidneys and can inter- fere with hormone levels leading to irregular testicle formation in males. Other reports indicated the plasticizing chemicals are associated with infertility. But some say that extrapolat- ing the animal studies to humans just doesn't make sense. The American Council on Health and Science concluded that phthalates are not harm- ful to humans in the low levels a child would be exposed to by sucking on a plastic toy. That didn't end the concern, though. The children's toy industry is heavily regulated, and products containing phthalates have been pulled from the shelves at the demands of legislative bodies all over the world, from the Euro- pean Parliament to the state of California. But the sex toy industry remains largely unregulated. Because most regulatory bod- ies classify adult toys as "novelty items," there are different proce- dures for restricting and approv- ing sex toys than for products made of similar materials, like children's toys. Karmeisool said she believed the vibrator products in the Safe Sex Store to be made of silicone, and the majority of the vibrators are. "For the purpose of my store, we are very conscious and will address that issue," Karmeisool said. She said the Safe Sex Store has already started to phase out products that contain phthal- ates, but it must be done in "baby steps." "We can't just clean out the inventory because we have to be cost-effective for our customer," Karmeisool said. She said it would be up to the adult toy manufacturing com- panies to get these products off the market, because the average sex toy shopper isn't aware of the health problems phthalates could cause. This is especially true, she said, in more conservative communi- ties, where she said people are gen- erally less educated and the idea of usingsextoys is more taboo. "As a store, we are here to pro- vide consistent and correct infor- mation about any health concern the public may have about those products," Karmeisool said. RANDOLPH COURT APARTMENTS 1 62 Bedroom Apartment Homes Ground Floor Ranch Style! Private Entrance! Patio! Spacious Kitchen! Air Conditioning! Laundry Facilities! 24-Hour Emergency Maintenance! Pets Welcome! And much, much more! Call today to reserve your new address! 734971-2828 Equal Housing Opportunity A